Chevrolet Corvette C1: coming of age

| 3 Apr 2026
Classic & Sports Car – Chevrolet Corvette: coming of age

This car really honks on. 

The 1956 model is the lightest, best-looking Chevrolet Corvette and, with the standard 265cu in V8 – the only engine offered that year – packs at least 225bhp.

This example makes around 270bhp, thanks to being fitted with a 283, introduced the following year, on carburettors.

Running on an empty stretch of dual carriageway somewhere in the north-east, with our Ford Focus estate flat out and straining to keep up, Howard Dawson’s 1950s sports car easily pulls away.

“I’ve had it up to 120mph,” he says later, “and there’s more to come.”

Classic & Sports Car – Chevrolet Corvette: coming of age

This Chevrolet Corvette C1’s whitewalls hide an upgrade to front disc brakes

Howard really uses this car: 7500 miles in 15 months, including 900 in the first week on a round-trip to Knebworth and Mount Stuart.

And the roof hardly ever goes up. “If it rains, I just drive a bit faster so it goes over the windscreen,” he says. “It’s only a problem if you stop.” 

Faced with the choice of this or an XK140, you’d be hard pushed to pick the Jaguar.

You sit quite near the high, ‘Daytona weave’-covered floor – there’s a separate chassis under there, remember – but not as close to the wheel as in an XK, whose seating position is similar, although here the delicate gearknob is too low.

The high clutch takes some getting used to, and it judders on take-off if you’re imprecise.

First gear is very tall, and it’s easy to allow too much clutch slip when the juddering gets worse, coupled with some nasty smells. It all recovers quickly, though, so no harm done.

Once under way, you don’t need first gear again unless the car comes to a halt, because it will happily pull second from anything above walking pace.

This enormously flexible ratio will see you all the way to 100mph, passing through the marvellous 2500rpm exhaust crackle on the way.

Change up to third – a light enough shift, with an odd but deliberate slide sideways before it slips into the slot – and it keeps pulling.

Classic & Sports Car – Chevrolet Corvette: coming of age

This Chevrolet Corvette C1’s motor is a non-original 283cu in unit, with 270bhp

It’s geared for about 25mph per 1000rpm in top, so 2500-3000rpm gives easy 75-85mph cruising, where the ’Vette feels happiest.

You have to scan the dash to locate the centrally mounted rev counter, whose small dial always reads less than you expect.

The brakes – now discs at the front on this car – have a firm pedal and, without a servo, need a shove to pull you up, but they are a vast improvement on the drums, which would begin to fade after one hard stop. 

Chevrolet later tacitly admitted this shortcoming when the ‘mid-year’ cars received discs all round: a sports car has to be able to contain its own performance, after all.

The biggest surprises are the chassis and steering. Although the ride at the rear is a bit lively – improved after Howard fitted the correct shock absorbers – the front tracks well.

The unassisted steering has good weight, being higher-geared than on later cars, but it’s the mid-year chassis’ only real shortcoming.

The recirculating-ball system allows you to place the car accurately, and it tracks and follows its line well.

The engine is set well back in the Robert McLean-designed frame to give near-ideal 52:48 front-to-rear weight distribution.

This makes the ’Vette a slight understeerer, with plenty of grip from the radials so the rear doesn’t get out of shape as often as you might expect.

In short, you can drive this car as hard and fast as a modern with no worries, and there’s enough cornering power to keep up with hatches on roundabouts.

Classic & Sports Car – Chevrolet Corvette: coming of age

The Chevrolet Corvette C1 has a lively rear end

The 1956 car marked the point during the Corvette’s transformation, from wallflower to muscle motor, when things started to come right.

The original 1953 car’s 235cu in straight-six had been joined in 1955 by Chevy’s new small-block V8 in its original 265cu in form, enlarged for the following year when fuel injection became available as an option.

By 1956, a manual transmission was offered, a relief after the cursed two-speed Powerglide auto, although it was only a three-speed, whose close ratios necessitated a tall first gear.

The slightly fussy styling was cleaned up, with single, uncovered headlights and a shaving of the Starship Enterprise-like protuberances mounting the tail-lights, leaving simple but super-cool scoops in the tops of the wings that, at night, flood with red light from the simple round lenses.

The side scallop was in, the hood much improved and wind-up windows fitted, making the car a convertible but retaining the smooth roadster looks by hiding the folded top under a hinged flap behind the seats.

An optional hardtop was available, too.

Suddenly the Corvette had grown up, surviving by the skin of its teeth after some elements within GM had wanted to kill it off while still a troublesome infant.

Zora Arkus-Duntov is the man credited with saving the Corvette from extinction and giving it the balls to fight its own battles, and by 1956 his influence was becoming clear.

A few fussy touches remain on the ’56 car. The scallops, a Corvette trademark until 1962, are delineated by superfluous chrome trims, the exhausts exit through the rear bumpers, encouraging corrosion and rattles, and the little scoops on the tops of the front wings – a throwback to the original Motorama show car of 1953 – are entirely cosmetic and lead nowhere – although, from the side, they at least echo the profile of the scallops.

Classic & Sports Car – Chevrolet Corvette: coming of age

The Chevrolet Corvette C1’s scooped tail-lights

The styling inspiration for the ’56 came from two 1955 Motorama show cars: the LaSalle II and the Biscayne (later adopted as model names in their own rights).

The compact Biscayne contributed the vertical-bar front grille and the concave scallop.

The LaSalle II moved the scallop from the rear of the car to behind the front wheelarches, although chief stylist Harley Earl later admitted that the side styling was borrowed from earlier LeBaron coachwork.

The headlights, grille shape and twin bulges in the bonnet were inspired by the Mercedes-Benz 300SL (repeated on the later SLK) – and throughout early Corvette development, Chevy’s engineers had been pulling apart Jaguar XKs to see what made them tick.

Early numbers were pitiful, however. Fewer than 700 Corvettes were made in ’55, the year of the shift to the V8.

In the 1956 model year, that rose to 3388 while Ford sold five Thunderbirds for every Corvette produced.

The following year, however, production almost doubled, and 9168 Corvettes were sold in 1958.

By then the Thunderbird had piled on the weight – and two extra seats – while the Corvette, now with four headlights, stuck to its original remit as a dual-purpose sports car.

Howard, who had already restored his Austin A40 Sports and commutes regularly on his 1962 BSA A65, knew what he wanted when some spending money became available: “Something with more power. I started looking at TVRs, Jaguar XK8s and Porsches, but nothing quite did it for me except the TVRs.”

Classic & Sports Car – Chevrolet Corvette: coming of age

The Chevrolet Corvette C1’s rev counter sits in the middle of the symmetrical dashboard

“I kept raising the budget but didn’t want to go too mad. I’ve loved 1940s-’60s American cars since I was about 10, but never thought I could afford a ’50s Corvette – then, suddenly, the pound-to-dollar rate became attractive.

“It had to be a single-headlight V8 car, so that meant 1956 or ’57. There were none in the UK so I started looking in America, using eBay, and was surprised at how many were for sale.

“I eventually found Proteam Corvettes in Ohio. They had about 150 ’Vettes, of which more than 20 were 1956-’57 cars, ranging from rebuild projects to National Corvette Restorers Society ‘condition one’ cars, but I wanted one I could use.

“They also had a gorgeous Cascade Green and cream ’56 car with cream interior, described as being ‘condition two’.

“I was the top bidder at the end of the auction, but Proteam withdrew the car because the bidding hadn’t reached its reserve, which worked out at ‘only’ £26,000.

“I had never spent anywhere near that on a car, let alone a ‘part-time’ classic, but it was really special.

“It had been a one-owner car for 45 years, had been drag-raced then dry-stored for 21 years in Florida, fitted with a non-matching 283 motor.

“It was then bought by someone in Tennessee and given a new single Edelbrock four-barrel carburettor on an Edelbrock Performer manifold.

“The original four-barrel Carter carburettor and manifold came with the car, and it had new paint, interior and whitewall radials, some fresh chrome, plus new hood, carpets, exhaust and fuel tank.”

Classic & Sports Car – Chevrolet Corvette: coming of age

The Chevrolet Corvette C1’s stylish three-spoke steering wheel

“It was either buy it or pay off half my mortgage, and my partner Janice said, ‘Why do you want to pay off half your mortgage?’” Howard remembers.

“What a girl! I paid the deposit by Visa then sent the rest via bank transfer to the USA.”

To get it home, the name of Alan Shores at Kingstown Shipping in Hull kept cropping up: “He offered to do all the paperwork at US customs, inspect the car in New Jersey, ship it in a container to Felixstowe, do all of the UK customs paperwork and then transport it to a warehouse in Ipswich for storage until I could collect it. The deal was done.

“I took out full insurance cover for the two weeks’ shipping, which was costly enough to make a year’s fully comp insurance look positively cheap,” recalls Howard.

“In the meantime, we joined the Classic Corvette Club UK, booked to attend the 50th Anniversary Nationals at Knebworth in June 2003 and hoped the car would be okay to get there.

“It took two weeks to reach the coast from Ohio, then just missed customs clearance to make the boat so had to wait another two weeks.

“It then had to wait a further two weeks until the boat was full. A fortnight later it reached Felixstowe, then we waited three weeks to clear customs.

“It cost 5% import duty, but no VAT as the car was over 30 years old.”

With only a week to go before the CCCUK anniversary weekend at Knebworth, Howard decided to drive the Corvette the 300-plus miles home: “It had been damaged around the rear bumpers and under the rear skirt, which I thought had been done by a big ’50s Chevy Biscayne in the same container, but I later realised it was caused by a forklift pushing it into the box.”

Classic & Sports Car – Chevrolet Corvette: coming of age

‘The 1956 Chevrolet Corvette marked the point during the Corvette’s transformation, from wallflower to muscle motor, when things started to come right’

“I signed the paperwork, collected the keys, put in the two gallons of petrol we’d taken with us, turned the key – and the battery was as flat as a pancake,” he continues.

“An AA man came with jump leads and a booster, but it was like trying to turn a cement mixer with an electric drill.

“He connected his truck battery as well and, after a few turns, it fired up – what a sound!

“On the way home it ran really well, sitting at a constant 80-90mph with the top down. Every curve, line and corner, every instrument and every piece of chrome looked incredible. It was fascinating – and it still is.

“With about 10 miles to go, a car in front of me slowed to turn right then stopped, but when I pressed the clutch pedal it went flat to the bulkhead.

“The AA came out again and fixed it temporarily with tie straps, then followed me home.

“I’ve been a member of the AA since buying the A40 Sports 13 years ago and I have certainly had my money’s worth.

“We were home by 8:30pm, but the following morning it happened again – the other end of the clutch linkage had come off.”

Howard has since rebuilt the engine and replaced some of the damaged chrome, but everything above the bumpers is original: “I go to Vette Gal for rare trim bits – Mary-Jo Rohner is tops for early Corvette parts.”

What’s important is that Howard plans to keep using the car – as a member of Teesside Yesteryear Motor Club, he travels to shows all over the UK.

Just don’t try to keep up with him.

Images: James Mann

This was first in our December 2004 magazine; all information was correct at the date of original publication


Chevrolet’s small-block: mighty motor

Classic & Sports Car – Chevrolet Corvette: coming of age

The Chevrolet Corvette’s iconic small-block V8

The small-block Chevrolet V8 was introduced to the Corvette and Chevy sedans in 1955, and it formed the backbone of NASCAR racing motive power for decades.

Designed by a team of 50 engineers led by Ed Cole, it is simple and strong, having individual rocker posts rather than shafts, and features deep crankcase skirts for stiffness.

Every version, from the weird 262cu in of 1975-’76 to the 400, is oversquare, starting with a bore of 3¾in and a stroke of 3in for 265cu in.

To reach 283cu in for the 1957 version was a simple matter of boring the block to 3⅞in and keeping the same crankshaft.

This capacity was also offered with fuel injection, proudly boasting 1bhp per cubic inch – although this was the first time Chevrolet had expressed power in anything other than 5bhp multiples, so it could have been more.

All engines had main bearings of at least 2.3in and 2in or 2.1in big-end journals.

Performance versions, for the Z/28 Camaro and LT-1 and L82 Corvettes, had four-bolt main-bearing caps and, in the more modern iteration, the LS1, still proudly running pushrods, has cross-bolted mains, too.


The evolution of the early Corvette

Classic & Sports Car – Chevrolet Corvette: coming of age

The early Chevrolet Corvette has a straight-six and no scalloped sides © Will Williams/Classic & Sports Car

1953: Weedy combination of straight-six, two-speed auto and mushy handling. The 1954 and ‘55 cars look the same, but ’55 V8s – that’s most of them – have a larger ‘V’ in the side name script, 0-60mph in 9 secs and a 120mph top speed. A handful of late cars had three-speed manual ’boxes, as used on the ’56.

1958: Four headlights and now 10in longer, 3in wider, 100lb heavier. More fussy detail front and rear, including ‘gill’-type reverse scallop with three ‘teeth’ and fake louvres on bonnet, but rev counter moves to in front of the driver. For 1960, rear anti-roll bar was an American first. Rochester fuel-injected 290bhp 283 (first seen as a 283bhp unit in ’57) gives 6.9 secs 0-60mph, 118mph.

1961: First sight of the ‘ducktail’, previewing the flat-fronted ‘mid-year’ models that ran from 1963 to the end of ’67. Cleaner looks: simple grille replaces ‘teeth’; headlight rims now body colour. For ’62, black mesh grille infill, anodised sill panels and fine ‘blades’ in side scoops instead of strakes. Engine enlarged to 327cu in, with up to 360bhp, 5.9 secs 0-60mph and 140mph-plus.


Factfile

Classic & Sports Car – Chevrolet Corvette: coming of age

1956 Chevrolet Corvette

  • Sold/number built 1956/3467
  • Construction glassfibre body over steel ladder chassis
  • Engine all-iron, ohv 265cu in (4638cc) V8, with four-barrel carburettor
  • Max power 225bhp @ 5200rpm
  • Max torque 270lb ft @ 3600rpm
  • Transmission three-speed manual, RWD
  • Suspension: front independent, by unequal-length wishbones, coil springs rear live axle, leaf springs; telescopic dampers f/r
  • Steering recirculating ball
  • Brakes drums
  • Length 14ft (4267mm)
  • Width 5ft 10½in (1791mm)
  • Height 4ft 4in (1321mm)
  • Wheelbase 8ft 6in (2591mm)
  • Weight 2880lb (1306kg)
  • 0-60mph 7.5 secs
  • Top speed 120mph
  • Mpg 16
  • Price new $3120

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